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Marriage Relationships Chapter 6

Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

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Page 1: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

Marriage Relationships

Chapter 6

Page 3: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

• What is prenuptial agreement?– Who tend to get prenuptial agreements?

– Thoughts? Advantages and disadvantages?

– Would you consider a marriage contract, or prenuptial agreement?

Page 4: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

• Do you think that some people get married for all the wrong reasons? What are they?

Page 5: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

Reasons to Re-consider

• Age• Length of courtship• Abuse• Differences• On and Off• Parental disapproval• Low Sexual satisfaction

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Individual Motivations for Marriage

• Why do people get married?

• What is the greatest expected benefit of marriage in the United States?

Page 7: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

• Love• Personal Fulfillment• Companionship• Parenthood• Economic Security

– What are the social functions of marriage? Why does marriage even exist?

Individual Motivations for Marriage

Page 8: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

• The primary function of marriage is to bind a male and female together who will reproduce, raise their young and socialize them to be productive members of society.

• Additional functions:– regulate sexual behavior – stabilize adult personalities by providing a

companion

Societal Functions of Marriage

Page 9: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

Traditional vs. Egalitarian Marriages

Page 10: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

• The wedding is a rite of passage• Weddings reflect traditional cultural

definitions of women as property• Weddings can create conflict• Weddings have become commercialized

events that often reflect a couples values and beliefs

Marriage as a Rite of Passage

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• What do you think are the most difficult changes to cope with when getting married?– Both positive and negative– What are some good strategies of coping with

these changes?

Discussion

Page 12: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

• Each spouse becomes part owner of what the other earns in income and accumulates in property.

Legal Changes after Marriage

Page 13: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

• The married person begins adopting values and behaviors consistent with the married role including: – Changes in how money is spent.– Discovering that one’s mate is different from one’s

date.– A loss of freedom.

Personal Changes after Marriage

Page 14: Marriage Relationships Chapter 6. Links  /middle-class-couples-sign-prenuptial-agreements- 11764996

• Parents, In-laws, and Friendship Changes– Parents are likely to be more accepting of the

partner following the wedding.– Less time will be spent with friends because of the

new role demands as a spouse.

Changes after Marriage

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• Experience loss of freedom• Feeling more responsibility• Missing alone time• Change in how money is spent• Discovering that one’s mate is different from

one’s date• Sexual changes• Power changes

Marital changes

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Studying Marital Relationships

• Marital Success is measured in terms of marital stability and marital happiness– Stability=time spent together (years)– Happiness=Emotionality• More difficult to measure-Subjective

***Research: All marital relationships are a process. Many end while other are sustained. Researchers attempt to study what characteristics are common among both happy, stable relationships and those that are unhappy and often end in divorce.